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Raleigh
News & Observer Publishes Series On Long-Term Care
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The Raleigh News & Observer published a
series of articles and opinion pieces about the issue of
long-term care for the elderly. Summaries appear below.
- "Who
Can Afford To Be Old and Sick?": A growing number of
middle-income retirees with chronic illnesses or
disabilities are struggling to pay for long-term care
services such as nursing homes, assisted living and
in-home aides, the News & Observer reports.
Those affected earn too much to qualify for Medicaid but
not enough to afford private long-term care insurance or
to pay for such care out of pocket (Goldsmith [1],
Raleigh News & Observer, 8/27).
- "When
Long-Term Care Insurance Makes Sense": According to
the
Administration on Aging, financial planners say
long-term care insurance can be a good option for
individuals with assets of $75,000 or more; retirement
incomes of $25,000 to $35,000 per person or $35,000 to
$50,000 per couple; and the ability to pay premiums
without difficulty, even if they increase over time, the
News & Observer reports. The "relatively
new type of insurance" varies in coverage from in-home
care for between one and two months to nursing home care
for indefinite periods, according to the News &
Observer. The cost of such plans range from less
than $1,000 to as much as $9,000 per year depending on
the services included and the age of the individual
purchasing the policy (Goldsmith [2], Raleigh News
& Observer, 8/27).
- "Many
Stopping Points Along a Continuum of Care": In
recent decades, there has been a "continual evolution of
services and care settings that fill every imaginable
niche between home and the nursing home," Martha Grove
Hipskind, an elder care consultant, writes in the
News & Observer. Services such as senior centers,
medication management, home-delivered meals, retirement
communities, assisted living, respite care and hospice
can be placed on a "continuum of care" to reflect the
transition of an individual's aging needs, she says
(Grove Hipskind, Raleigh News & Observer,
8/27).
- "Majority
Caught in the Middle": "We will need creative
solutions that allow for a combination of private pay
and public subsidy for people who don't fit the
traditional 'low-income' criteria" to qualify for
financial assistance in paying for long-term care, Liz
Scott, director of Adult Economic Services in
Wake County Human Services, writes in a News &
Observer opinion piece. Scott says that the
"reliance on programs designed to help only those
technically below the poverty level will not serve our
senior adults well in the years ahead" (Scott, Raleigh
News & Observer, 8/27).
"Reprinted with permission from
http://www.kaisernetwork.org. You can view the
entire Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, search the
archives, or sign up for email delivery at
http://www.kaisernetwork.org/dailyreports/healthpolicy.
The Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report is published for
kaisernetwork.org, a free service of The Henry J. Kaiser
Family Foundation . © 2005 Advisory Board Company and
Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.
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